Field Guide

Mosses, Liverworts, and Lichens

Showing 1 - 6 of 6 results
Media
Pale gray cluster of gray reindeer lichen growing in a patch of moss
Species Types
Scientific Name
Cladina rangiferina (syn. Cladonia rangiferina)
Description
Gray reindeer lichen, also called reindeer moss, takes the form of bright ashy or silvery-gray, branching cushions that grow on the soil. The branch tips usually bend to point in the same direction, as if combed or blown by a strong wind.
Media
Stippleback lichen (Dermatocarpon sp.) growing on a rock
Species Types
Scientific Name
Dermatocarpon spp.
Description
Stippleback lichens, or rock tripes, are almost always found on bluffs, boulders, and outcrops. They cling to their substrate by a single point of attachment and typically grow in clusters. The surface of these floppy-looking lichens is covered with tiny black dots.
Media
Star rosette lichen (Physcia stellaris) growing with firedot lichen (Caloplaca sp.) on tree bark at Runge CA
Species Types
Scientific Name
Physcia stellaris
Description
The star rosette lichen is a super common, small foliose lichen that most often grows on trees, including trunks, limbs, and twigs. The pale gray thallus has branching, petal-like lobes. The center of the rosette is almost always crowded with apothecia cups with black or dark gray centers.
Media
A variety of foliose lichens nearly covering the trunk of a small redbud tree, with redbud flowers in upper right
Species Types
Scientific Name
About 436 species in Missouri
Description
A lichen is a composite organism formed by certain fungus species that join with certain algae species. Lichens can be many colors and can be crusty, leaflike, flaky, branching, or mossy. They grow on rocks, trees, or other surfaces.
Media
Common script lichen growing on a small hickory tree at Painted Rock CA
Species Types
Scientific Name
Graphis scripta
Description
The common script lichen produces spores in minute, branching cracks that look like tiny, strange writing. It’s easy to imagine these could be the poems of little elves.
Media
Silver Beard Moss, or grimmia dry rock moss, Grimmia laevigata
Species Types
Scientific Name
Grimmia laevigata
Description
Silver beard moss grows on dry, exposed rocks and has a coarse texture. Each grayish-green leaf has a long, white, hairlike, slightly curved extension at the tip, giving this moss a silvery cast like a mink coat.
See Also

About Mosses, Liverworts, and Lichens in Missouri

Mosses, liverworts, hornworts, and lichens seem rather similar, but these organisms are in very different groups. Mosses, liverworts, and hornworts are small, low plants usually found in damp habitats. Unlike more familiar plants, they lack veinlike structures and do not produce flowers or seeds — instead, they produce spores. Meanwhile, lichens are not plants at all: they are a collection of different fungi that have photosynthetic algae living within their tissues.